Strong innate immune response and cell death in chicken splenocytes infected with genotype VIId Newcastle disease virus

36Citations
Citations of this article
43Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

This article is free to access.

Abstract

Background: Genotype VIId Newcastle disease virus (NDV) isolates induce more severe damage to lymphoid tissues, especially to the spleen, when compared to virulent viruses of other genotypes. However, the biological basis of the unusual pathological changes remains largely unknown. Methods. Virus replication, cytokine gene expression profile and cell death response in chicken splenocytes infected with two genotype VIId NDV strains (JS5/05 and JS3/05), genotype IX NDV strain F48E8 and genotype IV NDV strain Herts/33 were evaluated. Statistical significance of differences between experimental groups was determined using the Independent-Samples T test. Results: JS5/05 and JS3/05 caused hyperinduction of type I interferons (IFNs) (IFN- and -) during detection period compared to F48E8 and Herts/33. JS5/05 increased expression level of IFN- gene at 6h post-inoculation (pi) and JS3/05 initiated sustained activation of IFN- within 24h pi, whereas transcriptional levels of IFN- remained unchanged at any of the time points during infection of F48E8 and Herts/33. In addition, compared to F48E8 and Herts/33, JS3/05 and JS5/05 significantly increased the amount of free nucleosomal DNA in splenocytes at 6 and 24h pi respectively. Annexin-V and Proidium iodid (PI) double staining of infected cells showed that cell death induced by JS3/05 and JS5/05 was characterized by marked necrosis compared to F48E8 and Herts/33 at 24h pi. These results indicate that genotype VIId NDV strains JS3/05 and JS5/05 elicited stronger innate immune and cell death responses in chicken splenocytes than F48E8 and Herts/33. JS5/05 replicated at a significantly higher efficiency in splenocytes than F48E8 and Herts/33. Early excessive cell death induced by JS3/05 infection partially impaired virus replication. Conclusions: Viral dysregulaiton of host response may be relevant to the severe pathological manifestation in the spleen following genotype VIId NDV infection. © 2012 Hu et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Hu, Z., Hu, J., Hu, S., Liu, X., Wang, X., Zhu, J., & Liu, X. (2012). Strong innate immune response and cell death in chicken splenocytes infected with genotype VIId Newcastle disease virus. Virology Journal, 9. https://doi.org/10.1186/1743-422X-9-208

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free